tv ABC World News Tonight With David Muir ABC January 30, 2024 3:30pm-4:00pm PST
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experts from around the bay area . world news tonight with david muir is next, and i'll see you back here at four. tonight, the deadly attack on u.s. troops. what we've now learned, the response now coming. president biden says he's made a decision on the response, after that drone strike killing three american soldiers, wounding more than 40 others. martha raddatz standing by live from jordan. what sources are now telling abc news about the response. here in the u.s., the border crisis, with senate republicans and democrats signaling they're the closest in years on an
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immigration solution, the house signaling they're not interested. instead, moving to impeach homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas. the dramatic surveillance images tonight showing armed israeli commandos disguised as a doctor, a woman, and a patient in a wheelchair, raiding a hospital in the west bank. what they claim about who they were after. james longman from israel. the tourists killed on board a boat off cancun after the boat sinks. several others rescued. the captain arrested tonight. we're tracking a new major storm that will slam the u.s. los angeles, up to eatle, denver and minneapolis bracing. where this is all headed. dramatic new testimony tonight in the trial of the michigan mother charged in her son's deadly school shooting. what she can be heart saying in the car about her son after the shooting. tonight, implanting a chip in a human brain. elon musk announcing his company neuralink has now successfully done this. what it could potentially mean for patients with paralysis,
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after strokes, accidents, a.l.s. will reeve reporting. tonight, the carnival cruise rescuing two kayakers strabded out at sea. the extraordinary rescue. and the other rescue tonight on the highway. police saving circus animals from this burning truck. the camps and zebras and other animals rescued. and the beloved actress who took broadway by storm. tonight, the tributes to a trailblazer, as we celebrate broadway star chita rivera. good evening and it's great to have you with us here on a tuesday night. we do goint begin tonight with u.s. retaliation coming, after the attack that killed three u.s. soldiers in jordan. the pentagon giving president biden multiple options. tonight, the president says he has now decided how the u.s. will respond. the president tonight saying he
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holds iran responsible for supplying the weapons used in the attack. the pentagon says u.s. forces in the region have come under attack at least 165 times by iranian-backed militants. this one, of course, taking american lives. president biden speaking to each of the families of the fallen, and tonight, he has decided now on a response. martha raddatz leading us off. martha traveling to jordan, tonight. >> reporter: tonight, final preparations under way for retaliatory strikes against iran backed militants, which could come at any time now. a response to the brazen drone attack that left three american soldiers dead, 40 wounded, at a remote desert base here in jordan. president biden today making clear his mind is made up. have you made a decision how you'll respond to the attack? >> yes. >> reporter: a response that will strike "multiple targets" over several days, according to a u.s. official, targeting the facilities that enabled the drone attack. but another senior u.s. official acknowledging that the strikes
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will not likely hit iran itself, given the president's deep concerns over the war escalating. mr. president, do you hold iran responsible for the death of those three americans? >> i do hold them responsible in the sense that they're supplying the weapons to the people who did it. i don't think we need a wider war in the middle east. that's not what i'm looking for. >> reporter: the u.s. did strike facilities in syria, used by iran's revolutionary guard, back in november. a facility believed to be providing weapons and funding to the militant groups in iraq and syria. one of the iranian backed groups under suspicion tonight, kata'ib hizballah, claims its suspending attacks on u.s. forces in the region, but the pentagon saying, "actions speak louder than words." >> i don't think we could be any more clear that we have called on the iranian proxy groups to stop their attacks. they have not. and so we will respond in a time and manner of our choosing.
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>> reporter: president biden today speaking with the families of the fallen scholl jers. 46-year-old sergeant william rivers, 23-year-old sergeant breonna moffett, and 24-year-old sergeant kennedy sanders. the president expressing sorrow for their deaths and gratitude for their service. today, moffett and sanders posthu posthumously promoted to the rank of sergeant. and tonight, our faith abubey speaking with the family of breonna moffett. her mother francine describing the moment military officials told her her daughter was dead. >> he looked at me, and he said, i'm sorry, but killed this morning in a drone attack. and i'm like -- my baby. my baby. you can't take my baby.
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she's gone. she's not coming back. when i see her again, it's in her casket. she's not walking through my front door. >> david: martha with us live from jordan tonight. and we know that president biden will attend the dignified transfer of those soldiers back to dover. in the mean time, what more are you learning about the coming american response to this deadly attack? >> reporter: david, the president is hesitant to strike iran itself during this planned multi-day bombing barrage, a u.s. official tells me tonight that iranian assets outside of iran could be targets, and most of the strikes, said the official, will be inside syria. david? >> david: martha raddatz traveling to the region, live from amman tonight. martha, thank you. back here at home tonight, and to the crisis on the
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boarder. for months, republicans putting pressure on president biden to do something. and now with senate democrats and republicans close to a deal, tonight, house republicans say they're not interested. instead, moving forward in their effort to impeach secretary of homeland security alejandro mayorkas. rachel scott on the hill again tonight. >> reporter: for months, republicans have been calling for a tough new immigration law. president biden says he's willing to compromise, and the senate is closing in on a bipartisan deal. but tonight, house republicans taking a very different approach. not interested in the senate's solution, they're moving instead to impeach homeland secretary alejandro mayorkas over his handling of the border. >> we cannot allow this man to remain in office any longer. >> reporter: democrats calling it ludicrous. >> the sham impeachment of secretary mayorkas is a baseless political stunt by extreme maga republicans. >> reporter: republicans say mayorkas has willfully and
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system systematticly refused to enforce immigration laws, accusing him of making false statements to congress that the border is secure. mayorkas defiant, saying he has testified in front of congress 27 times, more than any other biden cabinet official, writing, "you claim that we have failed to enforce our immigration laws. that is false." democrats call it the height of hypocrisy for republicans to move ahead with impeachment right in the middle of negotiations over the immigration bill. >> you are sitting here right now trying to impeach a secretary of homeland security for neglecting his duties literally while he is trying to perform his duties and negotiate legislation. >> reporter: today, president biden urging lawmakers to give him the tools he needs to control the crisis at the border. >> i've done all i can do. just give me the power. >> reporter: but house speaker mike johnson is being urged to kill the bill by donald trump, who doesn't want biden to score a win in an election year. and johnson tells me if what
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he's heard about the senate compromise is true, it's dead on arri arrival. is that a snon starter for republicans in the house? >> we have a responsibility, a duty to the american people to insist that the border catastrophe is ended and just trying to whitewash that or do something for political purposes that it appears that may be is not going to cut it. >> reporter: again, david, donald trump has been urging republicans to reject any border deal. he wants to campaign on immigration in the general election. tonight, speaker of the house mike johnson rejecting any idea that he's trying to kill this bill to help trump's campaign, calling it all absurd, david. >> david: rachel, thank you. we do have dramatic surveillance images coming in tonight, israeli commandos disguised, storming a hospital in the west bank. you can see the armed israeli commandos right here raiding that hospital. tonight, who they claim they were after in the hospital, and james longman reporting from israel for us. >> reporter: dramatic video tonight of an israeli undercover raid on a hospital in the occupied west bank. the palestinian authority releasing this security footage.
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you can see israeli special forces disguised as medical staff, one dressed as a doctor, another as a palestinian woman, and another with a wheelchair. brandishing their weapons, they move quickly. the idf said they targeted three palestinian fighters, one of them a member of hamas who they claim were planning further terror attacks. the bloody aftermath confirming at least one of the men was killed in his hospital bed. benjamin netanyahu today praising the operation. but many are now raising concerns over israel's tactics, calling them a potential war crime. >> israel, of course, has the right to carry out operations to bring terrorists to justice, but those operations need to be conducted in full compliance with international humanitarian law. >> even if they were clear targets, clearly misusing the hospital, it would still be a war crime to present as a civilian or a medic to get close to them. >> reporter: this, the same day hamas says they're reviewing the latest cease-fire deal and the release of the more than 100
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hostages, as u.s. officials confirm to abc news the framework includes at least a six-week pause in hostilities during which the remaining civilian hostages would be returned in phases, with the elderly, women, and any children released first. they then discussed the return of all idf soldiers, potentially extending the pause and getting some much-needed aid into gaza, where hamas says more than 26,000 have now been killed. >> david: let's bring in james longman tonight, and james, how close are they to a hostage deal here? >> reporter: well, david, it does feel like we're on the edge of something. prime minister netanyahu did say today he would rule out some of hamas' key demands. is that part of the war of words or are we really going to see a deal in the coming days? david? >> david: james longman in tel aviv tonight. thank you. tonight, several tourists are dead and a boat captain under arrest after a boat carrying more than a dozen tourists sinks off cancun. four tourists did not survive this. authorities say the boat was returning to cancun in rough
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seas. nearby boats rescuing eight other people. several passengers still missing tonight. the victims all mexican nationals. tonight, the captain has been arrested while this investigation is now under way. back here in the u.s., and to the dramatic new testimony tonight in the trial of the michigan mother, jennifer crumbley, charged in her son's deadly school attack. what she can be heard saying in the police car about her son after the shooting. here's trevor ault. >> reporter: while jennifer crumbley sat in a squad car outside her home in the hours after learning her son had opened fire at oxford high school, she told an investigating office her son was a good kid, and she and her husband were not bad people. >> this is -- up. like, i just -- my son just ruined his life. i'll probably never see him again. >> reporter: crumbley, now on trial for involuntary manslaughter, telling the officer everything had been normal when her son went to school and he had, quote, no mental issues. >> i don't get it. i don't get what happened. >> reporter: inside the house, detectives discovering these gun
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range targets with bullet holes on the walls of the shooter's bedroom. an empty bottle of whiskey next to the then 15-year-old's bed. in the master bedroom, an open gun case next to an empty box of ammunition for a .9-millimeter handgun. and inside the tv stand, two other weapons found locked in a gun case, prosecutors noting the code. >> and what was it? >> it was 0-0-0. >> reporter: crumbley telling the investigator she had been at the school the morning of the attack for an emergency meeting with the shooter's counselor, then returned to work. her son opened fire less than two hours later. jennifer crumbley's attorney again questioned why school officials didn't do more. today, the dean of students testified the parents didn't tell them they had bought their son a gun, which would have changed the school's response. david? >> david: trevor ault on this case again tonight. thank you, trevor. we're going to turn next this evening to what could be a major head call breakthrough. elon musk announcing his company neuralink has implanted a chip
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in a human brain. what this could potentially mean for patients with paralysis, after strokes, accidents, and diseases including a.l.s. here's abc's will reeve tonight. >> reporter: tonight, a sign of hope for millions of americans living with paralysis. billionaire elon musk announcing that his company neuralink has surgically implanted its first brain chip in a human. he says the patient is recovering well and called the initial results promising. >> the device is designed to interpret your neural activity so you can operate a computer or a smartphone by simply thinking. >> reporter: the goal is to help patients with debill stating conditions control external devices with their thoughts. experts say the device could one day benefit people paralyzed by stroke, brain, and spinal cord injury, or a.l.s. >> this would be a major game-changer, if it were to be proven to be safe and effective. >> reporter: neuralink's device is now in clinical trials, joining a handful of other grouping testing brain/computer
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interface technology. this woman who had lost her voice was able to have a conversation with her husband through a mind-controlled avatar. >> i was thinking about running to the store. >> what time will you be home? >> reporter: and swiss researchers used artificial intelligence and brain and spine implants to help this man, paralyzed in an accident, walk again. experts say it's still a long road to prove the success and safety of this device and others like it, before it would be approved for consumers, but david, this is a beacon of hope for people living with paralysis, from things like stroke or a.l.s., or brain or spinal cord injury. >> david: remarkable examples you shared with us, will. the wife able to communicate with her husband, really something. will reeve tonight. thank you, will. tonight, an alarming discovery. police in kansas have found the stolen bronze statue of jackie robinson. the statue, of course, honoring the baseball icon, taken from a public park last week. firefighters responding to a trash fire, finding it in pieces and burning. authorities say the statue
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cannot be salvaged. police insist there will be arrests. doe nations already coming for a new statue. tonight, u.p.s. says it is cutting 12,000 jobs, most from management and contract positions, they say. the company says it needs to, quote, right-size its work force after volume fell in 2023. u.p.s. employs about a half million people worldwide. when we come back here tonight, tracking a major new storm set to slam the u.s. where this is headed. also, the carnival cruise ship rescuing two kayakers lost out at sea. the incredible images here. and then, look at this tonight. the rescue on a highway. the burning truck, the circus animals saved tonight. several animals. we'll have more in a moment. only unitedhealthcare medicare advantage plans come with the ucard - one simple member card that opens doors where it matters for you. what if we need to see a doctor away from home? ucard gets you in with medicare advantage's largest national provider network. how 'bout using it at the pharmacy? yes - your ucard is all you need. huh - that's easy!
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caribbean. and from indiana tonight, the circus animals rescued in grant county. two police officers helping to rescue nearly a dozen circus animals from a burning truck. body camera video showing police pulling zebras out of the truck. five zebras and a horse were saved. they also rescued four camels from that burning trailer. when we come back here tonight, celebrating a beloved broadway star, chita rivera. of course the hot sun can be tough on vehicles too you need weathertech all year round! come on, protect your investment laser measured floorliners and cargoliner will shield the carpeting from sand and snow for your interior, there's seat protector and sunshade plus, mudflaps and bumpstep for the exterior order american made products at weathertech.com surfs up yeah, right ♪ vicks vapostick provides soothing, non-medicated vicks vapors. easy to apply for the whole family.
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breaking ground for latina artists. a classically trained ballet dancer, her big break was in 1957 as anita in "west side story" on broadway. ♪ in america ♪ ♪ i got plenty of nothing ♪ >> david: she would appear on broadway for the next half century, playing rosie in "bye-bye birdie." in 1975 in "chicago." ♪ come on babe ♪ ♪ why don't we paint the town ♪ ♪ and all that jazz ♪ >> david: winning a tony award for her performance in 1984's "the rink." millions of americans would watch her performances on tv and in the movies, too. ♪ ♪ do you wanna have fun ♪ >> david: 1969's "sweet
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charity." ♪ hey big spender ♪ >> david: in 1986, a near fatal car accident would shatter her leg, but chita rivera refused to let it end her career. there would be grueling physical therapy, and she would return to the broadway stage. earning her second tony in 1993 at 60 for "kiss of woc woman." chita rivera sitting down with abc news just a couple of years ago, on the secret to longevity and to staying power. >> be yourself. work hard. and just think you can do everything and anything until you find out you can't. >> david: we learned late today that chita rivera died at the age of 91. tonight here, chita rivera, in her own words. >> we should have two lives. one, a tryout. and within you're judged by. but we don't.
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we have one life, and we have to live it as best we can. ♪ that's me ♪ >> david: chita rivera, a though we do have a level three strong storm are preparing for any outages now. >> i heard it's going to be a pretty hard rain. >> we all got a crash course last year with 12 atmospheric rivers that hit california. this is our first one this year, so we know the drill. >> we know the drill. another atmospheric river heading our way and the preparation plans are well underway. good afternoon. >> i'm kristen sze and i'm karina nova. we begin with the weather now and a series of storms moving into the bay area, which will mean days of rain. we have team coverage for you today
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on the storm. >> let's begin with spencer christian and a look at what you can expect. spencer >> okay, kristen and karina, let's go right to live doppler seven. and you can see that storm is closing in on us. clouds are beginning to move into the bay area right now. the rain will not be far behind. let's take a closer look at this storm on the exclusive abc seven storm impact scale. it's a level three storm. a strong storm uh. the strength of the storm will start to manifest itself late tomorrow. tomorrow afternoon into the evening hours with rain that will be heavy at times, strong gusty winds and of course, there's a possibility of flooding and wind damage. here's the forecast animation starting at 2 a.m. between 2 a.m. and about 830 or so. we'll see that first wave of rain moving into the north bay. it will be pretty much a north bay event up until about noon, and then early in the afternoon, we'll see the storm spreading to all parts of the bay area with periods of heavy downpours. it's going to be a very messy and slow and potentially hazardous afternoon and evening commute tomorrow, as those steady rains will just continue to fall into the evening hours up until almost midnight before the main body of that storm moves tgh
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